The alleged victim, then 27, told the jury at Southwark Crown Court that Harris pinned her in her chair and fondled her bottom and breasts plus “slobbered” on her neck at the Moorfields Eye Hospital in London.

The veteran entertainer is accused of a string of “brazen” public attacks against seven women and girls that span over 30 years.

Harris, previously of Berkshire, denies the seven counts of indecent assault over 30-year and one alternative count of sexual assault and appeared via video-link from HMP Stafford due to his old age and poor health.

The jury heard how Harris, now 86, had his trademark wobble board and didgeridoo with him at the time of the alleged attack on the woman, who has cerebral palsy, in September 1977.

She claimed the attack only stopped when she bent his fingers back until he cried out in pain and that she felt trapped as he “grovelled and slobbered” on her neck as she felt his beard tickle the back of her neck.

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She told police: “I’ve never had any experience with another human being like I had with that man.

“Rolf Harris doesn’t ask permission he just does what he wants. This is as degrading as it gets.”

She described to police officers he was on his hands and knees before he got up, putting his hands down her skirt and rubbing her breasts to “pump up the nipples”.

The woman, now in her 60s, described the shamed entertainer as an “evil b******d” and came forward to tell police about her alleged ordeal after hearing the entertainer was like “an octopus” with a previous victim.

She claims after the attack he taught her to play his trademark didgeridoo.

The court heard another man was in the room at the time of the alleged assault, who said he didn’t realise she was in trouble until he heard the victim yell.

She told the court: “He saw I was one of his pieces of prey like a hawk honing in on what he wanted to kill”.

His latest alleged victim told the court how she was targeted in a 10 minute ordeal at an eye hospital in London

The woman said in a video interview with police played to the court: “He walked into the room and came over to me and said ‘has anyone ever told you what a good looking woman you are?’

“I said, well some people have, but thank you for your nice comments’ and I put my hand out to shake his hand and he went ‘I can’t be doing with all that’, and within seconds he was behind me. There was no preliminaries.

“He must have been crouching on the floor because I was sitting forward in the chair so he must have been on his hands and knees, he could reach my neck.

“Suddenly he appeared from nowhere he came from behind me, he leaned right across me and started kissing the back of my neck.

“I could feel the hot air from his nostrils coming down my neck and he was obviously getting excited by his increased breathing, I could feel his beard tickling the back of my neck.

“He was saying ‘you’re gorgeous, you’re a lovely woman’ and he started slobbering all over me. I said ‘get off, I don’t like this sort of thing’.

“He then runs his hand down my back and then goes towards the back of my skirt with one hand down my skirt and the other hand under my bottom because I was leaning forward and he was feeling all around.

“I said ‘please stop, get off, no one comes up behind me and grovels all over my body’ but he still carried on – I’ve never known anyone who could spread their hands and fingers across my body so quickly, he covered all my back really, really fast.

“I couldn’t push my chair back because his body was pulling me forward so I couldn’t move. I was thrashing my head around to stop him from kissing my neck and working up to my face.

“He said ‘don’t be like that, I won’t hurt you, I’m just being friendly’.”

Harris, captured here in a court sketch from 2014, allegedly taught the woman to play the didgeridoo

The court heard Harris had also explained the history of the wobble board to the complainant – he discovered the incredible wobble sound as he fanned a painting that was about to set alight.

She said: “He told the story of how originally it was a painting and he had it propped up on a radiator to dry and the thing was about to catch fire and he grabbed it and fanned it and he got a wonderful sound that came out of it and then he made this wobble noise”

“Rolf was somebody that we had all grown up with and we loved him you know, he was part of our culture and I used to love listening to him on the TV and I liked the way he used to describe things when he was painting.”

When asked about the other man present in the room, she said: “When he spoke to me after Mr Harris had gone home and asked me why I was quite distressed, because he had never seen me like that before and I told him he said well I didn’t realise you were in trouble until heard you yell and then I got up and came over to see if you were alright.”

The woman, now in her 60s, will continue to give evidence at the trial this afternoon

She will continue to give evidence this afternoon.

Another of the alleged victims was as young as 12, while the oldest was 42, a jury of seven women and five men at London’s Southwark Crown Court heard.

None of the assaults, which are said to have taken place between 1971 and 2004 when Harris was aged between 41 and 74, are said to have involved “penetrative activity”.

Prosecutor Jonathan Rees said: “Most of the behaviour complained of falls into a broad category that might be described as unwanted groping, and includes, for example, grabbing or touching breasts over clothing, or slipping a hand up or into a skirt to touch the vaginal area.”

He continued: “One notable feature of the case is that none these assaults is alleged to have happened in private; all appear, so it is alleged, to have occurred in public settings when there were other people in the near vicinity.

“And it may be that you will want to consider whether Mr Harris’s celebrity status played any part in making him apparently so brazen in what it is alleged that he did.”

The woman, now in her 60s, described the shamed entertainer as an “evil b******d”

Another of the alleged attacks is said to have happened at a music studio near London Bridge.

Harris is said to have stroked an 18-year-old woman’s lower back and said: “If you were to join up the two dimples on a woman’s back to your bum crack it would make the shape of a diamond; I think it’s really sexy.”

Two men who saw the alleged incident described Harris’s behaviour as “creepy, cringing and lecherous”, the prosecutor said.

Rees said the prosecution expects Harris will say he has “never used the word or phrase ‘bum crack’ and that no intentional sexual touching took place”.

He is also accused of grabbing a teenager’s breast as he helped her on the TV programme Star Games in the summer of 1978.

Harris is said to have put his hand on her knee and slid it up her thigh over her jeans.

She later described him as a “dirty old man” to a family member when they asked how he had been, the jury heard.

Harris’s niece and her husband were in court listening as the details of his alleged offences were read out.

Harris was interviewed by the police on February 3 and 4 2015 at Stafford police station.

Harris, here in a 2014 court sketch, appeared via video-link for the trial at Southwark Crown Court

In a prepared statement at the end of the two days, he said: “A number of women accused me of indecent assault or sexual assault on dates a number of years ago.

“I do not know any of these people and have little recollection of the events and circumstances they say they attended and met me.”

He went on: “I deny sexually or indecently assaulting any of the people set out in the disclosure provided to me.”

In his closing remarks, Mr Rees said the truth was that “Mr Harris’s appetite for sexually assaulting young girls and women” had led him to commit the alleged offences, telling the jurors they must make their own minds up if this was so.

Harris was charged last year as part of Operation Yewtree, an inquiry into celebrities suspected of child sex offences.

He is standing trial via video link in a legal first because he will be too ‘ill, tired, or hungry’ if he has to attend in person.

The trial continues.

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